The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Columbus left here but you should stay

Canary Islands fan Robin heads to the magical, storied outpost of El Hierro

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It’s a Canary Island that is less theme park and more Jurassic Park, a Spanish hideaway more remote Yorkshire on a volcano than hectic Costa del Sol. Welcome to El Hierro, the magical outpost that was the last land Columbus saw as he sailed off the map in search of the New World. In the days of Columbus El Hierro was quite literally the end of the world, the finisterre where the known world came to an abrupt halt. You can imagine today how his sailors would have felt veering into the unknown as you sail or fly the clear ocean blue to get here. Gaze west and Florida lies more than 4,000km away across the Atlantic. Antarctica is 11,000km adrift to the south.

The smallest of the seven main Canary Isles lays claims to being the most fascinatin­g. It is the youngest, its volcanic eruptions often measured in thousands of years rather than millions. Indeed, there was a massive eruption just a few years ago – more on that later. Around 50,000 years ago El Hierro endured the trauma that gives it much of its appearance today. It was the site of a cataclysmi­c landslide that saw a whole swathe of the island tumble into the Atlantic, leaving the wide El Golfo bay you see today. I met locals who reckoned that the resultant tsunami must have been more than 100m high.

I’ve just been back for my second visit to El Hierro. The first occasion was a flying, one-night stay, but I was so entranced by this unique gem I resolved to return as soon as possible to spend more time on this most remote Canary Isle. My base was the Parador (www. parador.es). This stately retreat sits right on the ocean with vaulting cliffs rising more than 1,000km directly behind it, an apposite introducti­on to a spectacula­r isle.

I say spectacula­r and it is, with an incredible amount of diversity packed into a bijou space. It’s easy to see why El Hierro was designated a Unesco World Biosphere Reserve in 2000 and a Geopark by the same global body in 2014. There are subtropica­l forests in the interior awash with clouds of mist that are drawn in by the trade winds, while the fertile high plains look more like Yorkshire with their neat fields, dairy cows and dry stone dykes. Tracts are also volcanic moonscape, while the south is a parched desert where the trees are bent double by the almost constant force of the trade winds.

The best way to really get a feel for El Hierro is undoubtedl­y on a walking trip. I hooked up with KE Adventure Travel (www.keadventur­e.com), a UKbasked operator which specialise­s in group walking trips. Over three days they gave me an insight into what a week with them offers. My guide was the welcoming and engaging Paolo, who plans the routes as well as guides the groups, and he is a real fountain of knowledge on this most unique of isles.

Paolo told me all about the fresh produce that the island offers up in such abundance. There are the sweet, plump figs and the delicious almonds. Then there are the local Herreno cheeses and, the star for me, the island wine. On my last visit I only tried the sweet varieties but this time I was lucky to discover the dry white Vina Frontera. It went brilliantl­y with the rich bounty of seafood that is landed from the deep Atlantic, which swirls all around El Hierro.

Given the epic sweep of scenery the walks are diverse, too. I loved my first hike, which took me out of the capital of Valverde on a 12km circular route. A recent splash of rain had brought out the bountiful wildflower­s and the hills were alive with bright reds and deep purples. I walked through flowerspri­nkled meadows, along rugged ridges and down through gnarly forests that looked like something out of a fairytale.

The highlight of this first walk was the Garoe Tree. Water was a precious commodity to the original bimbache

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